Abstract

The dicarboxylic acid glutarate is an important building-block gaining interest in the chemical and pharmaceutical industry. Here, a synthetic pathway for fermentative production of glutarate by the actinobacterium Corynebacterium glutamicum has been developed. The pathway does not require molecular oxygen and operates via lysine decarboyxylase followed by two transamination and two NAD-dependent oxidation reactions. Using a genome-streamlined L-lysine producing strain as basis, metabolic engineering was performed to enable conversion of L-lysine to glutarate in a five-step synthetic pathway comprising lysine decarboxylase, putrescine transaminase and γ-aminobutyraldehyde dehydrogenase from Escherichia coli and GABA/5AVA amino transferase and succinate/glutarate semialdehyde dehydrogenase either from C. glutamicum or from three Pseudomonas species. Loss of carbon via formation of the by-products cadaverine and N-acetylcadaverine was avoided by deletion of the respective acetylase and export genes. As the two transamination reactions in the synthetic glutarate biosynthesis pathway yield L-glutamate, biosynthesis of L-glutamate by glutamate dehydrogenase was expected to be obsolete and, indeed, deletion of its gene gdh increased glutarate titers by 10%. Glutarate production by the final strain was tested in bioreactors (n = 2) in order to investigate stability and reliability of the process. The most efficient glutarate production from glucose was achieved by fed-batch fermentation (n = 1) with a volumetric productivity of 0.32 g L-1 h-1, an overall yield of 0.17 g g-1 and a titer of 25 g L-1.

Highlights

  • With an expected global market of 6.1 million tons in 2021, bio-based plastic is in the spotlight as suitable and environmental-friendly alternative to petro-based plastic1

  • In order to test if C. glutamicum is a suitable production host for glutarate, its response to glutarate as carbon source or as potential inhibitor of growth was determined by growth and microarrays analysis

  • C. glutamicum wild-type was grown in CGXII minimal medium with 25 mM glutarate as sole carbon source

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Summary

Introduction

With an expected global market of 6.1 million tons in 2021, bio-based plastic is in the spotlight as suitable and environmental-friendly alternative to petro-based plastic. Polyamides ( called nylons) are important plastics well known for fiber applications. Polyamides can be produced by ring-opening polycondensation of lactams as well as via condensation of dicarboxylic acids with diamines (Shen et al, 2010). Glutarate Production by Corynebacterium glutamicum dicarboxylate sebacic acid yields the polyamide Nylon-4,10 (Shen et al, 2010). Aliphatic dicarboxylic acids such as succinate, glutarate, adipate, pimelate, and sebacate are important monomeric building blocks for production of polymers such as polyamides, and polyurethanes and polycarbonates (Jambunathan and Zhang, 2014; Chung et al, 2015; Gobin et al, 2015). Copolymerization of glutarate with the diamine putrescine yields nylon-4,5 and its copolymerization with the diamine cadaverine yields nylon-5,5 (Park et al, 2013; Wang et al, 2017)

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